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UN envoy offers plan to re-start talks on government reconciliation in Somalia

The top United Nations envoy in Somalia
has presented Somali leaders with an "agenda for dialogue" aimed at helping
them overcome the current differences within the transitional federal authorities
on the way forward, particularly on the relocation of the fledgling government
from Kenya to Somalia.

According to a UN spokesman in New York,
Secretary-General Kofi Annan's Special Representative for Somalia, François
Lonsény Fall, presented the agenda to Somalia's President, Prime Minister
and, the Speaker and other Members of Parliament, in trips he made to Mogadishu
and nearby Jowhar on Monday and Wednesday.

Mr. Fall had an "extensive and frank
exchange" with both groups on reconciliation, the relocation of the government,
security issues and the deployment of foreign peacekeepers, key issues
that have stalled the latest attempt to re-establish a central authority
in the war-shattered Horn of Africa nation, which has had no functioning
government for 14 years following the collapse in 1991 of the government
of Muhammad Siad Barre.

In spite of differences among the members
of the Somali Federal Institutions, the Jowhar and Mogadishu groups responded
positively to Mr. Fall's initiative, and said they would continue discussions
with him on the issues raised.

"He intends to continue his shuttle
consultation between the two groups to narrow the gap between them before
organizing a meeting of the parties," the spokesman said.